West India Oil Co. (P.R.) v. Benítez Castaño

Me. Justice Cóedova Dávila

delivered the opinion of the court.

By Ordinance No. 37, of January 7, 1932, the Board of Commissioners of the Capital imposed an excise tax of $150 annually on each pump installed and/or operated within the limits of the Capital for the sale of gasoline. By Ordinance No. 122, of February 6, 1933, it changed said excise tax to $40 annually on each pump installed and operated on a public street, sidewall?, or. plaza, .and to $20 annually on each pump installed on public or private land. By Ordinance No. 130, of April 3, 1933, it imposed the same excise tax as was levied on each pump by Ordinance No. 122, and repealed the latter. Finally, by Ordinance No. 144, of June 6, 1933, it levied an excise tax identical to that levied by said Ordinance No. 122.

The Treasurer of the Capital, with the approval of the City Manager, notified the plaintiff that it must pay a lump sum of $9,800 before December 21, 1935, for the excise taxes imposed by said ordinances, and threatened to attach its property in case said excise taxes were not paid before said date.

The plaintiff petitioned the District Court of San Juan to grant a permanent injunction, restraining the defendants from performing any act tending to collect said excise taxes and from attaching and selling at auction to collect the same, any property of said plaintiff.

In the complaint it was alleged that the. defendants were attempting to collect “excises” (patentes) on pumps which never have been nor were then possessed, operated, or controlled by said plaintiff in its business of selling gasoline and oil, as they sought to collect said excise taxes on twenty-seven gasoline pumps and two oil pumps, when the plaintiff has only possessed and operated during the fiscal years from 1932 to 1935, twenty-two pumps during the year which ended on June 30, 1932; twenty-one pumps during the year which ended on June 30, 1933fifteen pumps' during the yéar-which ended on June 30, 1934; and fourteen pumps during the year which ended on June 30, 1935.

*269In accordance witli the prayer of the complaint, the District Court of San Juan issued a rule to show canse' and directed the defendants to abstain from collecting, the excise taxes in question pending a hearing on the rule. The defendants moved to dismiss the petition for injunction claiming in substance that plaintiff had an adequate and efficient remedy at law. Together with this motion the said defendants filed a demurrer on the ground that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. These questions were submitted upon briefs, and the district court overruled the same and issued a preliminary injunction restraining the defendants from performing any act tending to collect said táxes and from attaching any property of plaintiff, until it were decided whether a permanent injunction should be issued.

The lower court granted the preliminary writ of injunction exclusively on the ground that," according to the allegations of the complaint, a tax or excise was sought to be collected from plaintiff, on pumps which the latter did not possess or had never possessed during the fiscal years stated in the complaint.

In order to decide the question which served as a basis for the decision of the lower court, it is not necessary to apply Act No. 99 of 1931 (Sess. Laws, p. 626), as amended on May 4, 1933 (Sess. Laws, p. 254). Said act, by its section 32 a, authorizes an ordinary action to recover taxes paid under protest and provides that no other remedy will be allowed nor will any writ be issued to prevent or delay the collection of such taxes. It is sufficient to apply the general principles of law, without the necessity of invoking the provisions of said law, in order to reach the conclusion that plaintiff can not prevent the collection of the tax by means of a writ of injunction, upon the sole ground mentioned in the opinion of the court a quo to support its decision, for it has not paid or offered to pay the amount of the excise taxes on the number of pumps which it admits to possess.

*270Appellee is seeking to restrain the collection of certain excise taxes for the operation, within the jurisdiction of the Capital, of a certain number of pumps a part of which it possesses, and alleges that' the defendants are trying to collect “patents” for pumps it has never possessed, operated, or controlled.

In the judgment of the lower court, the collection of such a tax from the plaintiff on pumps of which it does not have the possession is equivalent to depriving it of its property without due process of law, and the court adds that in such cases the injunction is a proper remedy, and that section 32 a of said Act No. 99 of 1931 is not an obstacle thereto.

There is no doubt that an equity court may issue writs cf injunction to prevent the collection of taxes where the attendant circumstances are such as to justify judicial intervention. Courts, however, do not favor the exercise of judicial action unless it is necessary to protect substantial rights of the party invoking the equity jurisdiction. The writ of injunction must be issued in a clear case where the damage to the complaining party is really substantial. These are the general legal principles in the absence of express statutory prohibition. When this prohibition exists, the courts are bound to give it effect unless there are exceptional and extraordinary circumstances which determine and justify the equity jurisdiction.

Plaintiff admits that it owns and has installed within the Capital of Puerto Rico, for the retail sale of gasoline, a certain number of pumps, but claims that the defendants intend to levy and collect license (patentes) or excise taxes on a greater number of pumps than it in fact possesses, operates, or controls.

This is a case which, strictly speaking, can not be said to refer to an excessive assessment or valuation, but rather to the claim of an excise tax on property which does not belong to the taxpayer. In cases of excessive taxation, the courts maintain that in order that the taxpayer may invoke *271the equity jurisdiction, he must pay or offer to pay the tax, reducing the excess of the same. Equity will not enjoin the collection of a tax, any portion of which is legal and valid, unless payment or offer of payment of said portion is made. This doctrine does not apply where the assessment is wholly and entirely void. 61 C. J. 1089; 16 L.R.A. (N.S.) 807, 811; L.R.A. 1916-A, 972, 979.

In the case of Bismarck Water Supply Co. v. Barnes, L.R.A. 1916-A, 965, 971, the Supreme Court of North Dakota said:

“The mere fact that the tax of the plaintiff may be larger than that of a majority of the taxpayers in the state does not give it any standing in a court of equity. As was said by the Supreme Court of the United States in ‘State R. Tax Cases,1 92 U. S. 575, 614, 23 L. ed. 663, 674: ‘It is a profitable thing for corporations or individuals whose taxes are very large to obtain a preliminary injunction as to all their taxes, contest the case through several years ’ litigation, and, when in the end it is found that but a small part of the tax should be permanently enjoined, submit to pay the balance. This is not equity. It is in direct violation of the' first principles of equity jurisdiction.’
“At the time this action was commenced the defendant Barnes, as sheriff of Burleigh county, had already seized certain property belonging to the plaintiff. The plaintiff therefore had an adequate remedy at law by making payment of such taxes under protest, and bringing suit to recover the illegal excess. (Citations.)”

. In the case of Siegfried v. Raymond, 60 N.E. 868, 869, decided by the Supreme Court of Illinois, it was declared that a court of equity must grant a remedy by injunction against the imposition of a tax on exempted property, and it was held that in case a tax, a part of which is exempted, is sought to be recovered, equity will prevent the collection of said part, if it be possible to distinguish the part of the tax which is exempted from that which is not. The court added that in case the legal and illegal portions are so mixed that they can not be distinguished, the injunction must be allowed for all the property.

*272The doctrine established by the courts can not be more just. Whether it is a case of an excessive taxation or of a tax levied on property which does not belong to the supposed taxpayer, if part of the tax is legally owed, the duty of the person affected by the collection of the tax is to pay or to offer the payment of the tax which he owes, so as to place himself in position to invoke the equity jurisdiction.

Plaintiff in its brief maintains that it can not be determined exactly what part of said excise taxes which the municipality is attempting to collect, refers to the pumps which it has in fact possessed and operated. It argues that the municipal collector seeks to collect a lump sum of $9,800 without there being any way to determine at this stage ofithe proceeding how the $9,800 of excise taxes should be distributed or apportioned among the gasoline pumps. We do not accept this contention. In the complaint it is clearly alleged that an excise tax of $40 per year is levied on the license for each pump wholly or partially occupying the public streets, sidewalks, or plazas, and $20 per year for each pump installed within public or private land.

Plaintiff knows where it has installed its pumps and is not unacquainted with the amount it must pay on those which, as it alleges, belong to it. It could very well have paid or offered to pay this portion of the excise tax and applied for an injunction as to the excise taxes on pumps which, as it claimed, it does not possess, operate, or control.

Plaintiff itself admits that if the ordinances levying the excise taxes which it now attacks are valid, the tax would amount to $1,850. Plowever, not even this amount has been paid or tendered, according to the allegations of the complaint.

Concerning the validity of the ordinances attacked, plaintiff in its brief states that it is not clear whether the tax imposed by said ordinances is a property tax or an excise tax. It claims that it pays the following imposts and taxes for the benefit of the Capital of Puerto Rico:

*273(а) Property taxes during the year 1936 amounting to 2.54 per cent of the value of the properties including, of course, the pumps for the sale of gasoline.

(б) An excise tax of $200 every three months for the license to sell gasoline at wholesale.

(c) An excise tax of from $5 to $15 quarterly for a license for the business of selling gasoline at retail on each of the service stations or establishments in which said pumps are installed, this tax amounting to $200 per year.

Plaintiff argues that if the taxes imposed are considered as property taxes, they are unconstitutional for several, reasons, namely, because of lack of uniformity, because they levy a surcharge which exceeds 2 per cent of the value of the property located within the Capital, because they are confiscatory, and because they involve a double taxation.

In our judgment, although the ordinances establish as a basis for the computation of the taxes in question the payment of a fixed sum for each pump for the sale of gasoline or oil operated within the Capital, said taxes are collected for the license to operate said pumps and clearly constitute excise taxes on account of licenses.

The difference existing between an excise tax and a property tax has been clearly stated by the courts. The Supreme Court of the United States has suggested, for example, the following points as summarized in 26 E.C.L.. 35, sec. 19, citing Society for Savings v. Coite, 6 Wall. (U.S.) 594, 18 L. ed. 897:

“An excise and a property tax, when the two approach each other, ordinarily may be distinguished by the respective methods adopted of laying them and fixing their amounts. If a tax is imposed directly by the legislature without assessment, and its sum is measured by the amount of business done or the extent to which the conferred privileges have been enjoyed or exercised by the taxpayer irrespective of the nature or value of the taxpayer’s assets, it is regarded as an excise; but if the tax is computed upon a valuation *274of property, and assessed by assessors either where it is situated or at the owner’s domicil, although privileges may be included in the valuation, it is considered a property tax.”

The Supreme Court of California has said:

“Generally speaking, the function of a property tax is to raise revenue. Such a tax does not impose any condition nor does it place any restriction upon the use of the property taxed. A privilege tax, although also passed to raise revenue, and as such is to be distinguished from the license tax or regulatory charge imposed under the state’s police powers, is imposed upon the right to exercise a privilege, and its payment is invariably made a condition precedent to the exercise of the privilege involved.” Ingels v. Riley, 53 P. (2d) 939, 942.

In McKenney v. Alexandria, 147 Va. 157, 136 S.E. 588, it was held that a municipal ordinance which provides that every person who sells gasoline by the use of a curb pump, whether situated in the public streets or in a private property, shall pay the sum of $25 for each discharge standard, does not levy a tax on said article but an excise tax on the privilege of conducting said business.

As the excise taxes imposed by the ordinances attacked are not property taxes, but excise taxes, the grounds adduced by the appellee to maintain that said ordinances are unconstitutional need not be considered.

Appellee further urges that, conceding that said taxes are excise taxes, the same are illegal and void, among •other reasons, because the said gasoline pumps are a necessary element of the business of sale and distribution of ..gasoline and the taxes imposed by said ordinances constitute a double taxation, as the Insular Government has levied on plaintiff an excise tax of 7 cents on gallon of gasoline which it sells or imports (Act No. 40 of April 24, 1931, page 360); an excisa tax for the privilege of conducting the business oi! selling gasoline at wholesale; and another excise tax for the privilege of selling gasoline at retail (Act No. 17, approved June 3, 1927, page 458). It also says that said excise *275taxes are illegal and void because they deprive appellee of the equal protection of the laws and establish a discrimination against it, as it utilizes gasoline pnmps in its business whereas persons and entities selling gasoline without the nse of pnmps are free from the tax; because the ordinances levying said excise taxes provide that the Treasurer of the Capital is the person to determine who will be the persons subject to the payment of the tax or excise, and such delegation of power to the said Treasurer is illegal and unconstitutional.

It is clear that the element on which the taxes in question are levied is not a necessary part of the business of selling gasoline generally, which can be sold by other means without the use of pumps. A tax will be sustained if the element on which the additional tax is levied is not a necessary or usual part of the general business. Successors of Fantauzzi v. Municipal Assembly, etc., 295 Fed. 803; Fajardo Devel. Co. v. Camacho et al., 35 P.R.R. 327.

The allegations contained in the complaint on this point do not justify the issuance of a preliminary writ of injunction. In order that this remedy may be granted there must be present not only all the elements and requisites of a case falling within the jurisdiction of the court, but according to the majority of the decisions there must not be any doubt in the mind of the court that the tax or method adopted to make it effective is clearly unconstitutional. Lewis & Spelling “The Law of Injunctions,” 421.

The unconstitutionality of the law must be clear to justify judicial interference to restrain the collection of the tax.

The unconstitutionality of the ordinances does not clearly appear from the allegations of the complaint, and said ordinances are not exhibited therewith, nor are we in a position to say that this is a case of double taxation prohibited by law.

Appellants contend that the lower court erred in overruling the motion to dismiss the petition for injunction, as section 32a of the Act of 1931. gives to the taxpayer a *276legal, adequate, and efficient remedy, by paying under protest and bringing an ordinary action to recover tile taxes so paid.

Plaintiff maintains that said statutory provision does not give an adequate remedy, because it does not provide for the payment of interest to the taxpayer on the amount paid under protest, in case the tax turns out to be illegal, and because it only gives to the taxpayer a preferred claim and not a clear and absolute right to reimbursement, for although it provides that the amount paid under protest must be reimbursed, it does not contain a mandatory provision compelling the Treasurer to make immediate reimbursement, and also because said procedure exposes the taxpayer to a multiplicity of suits.

We agree that said section 32 a does not provide for the paymeni of interest.

This court has decided that in an action to recover taxes paid under protest, the taxpayer can not recover interest unless it is expressly authorized. Union Central Life Ins. Co. v. Gromer, 20 P.R.R. 80. In accordance with the viewpoint adopted by this court, the taxpayer who pays taxes to the Grovernment of the Capital under protest and who brings an action to recover said taxes, can not recover interest on the amount so paid, because there is no law to authorize it.

Now then, is the fact that neither said section 32 nor any other law provides for the payment of interest to the taxpayer on the amount paid under protest for taxes owed to the Grov-ernment of the Capital, a sufficient ground for the issuance of a writ of injunction to restrain the collection of the tax herein?

It was not until the jmar 1926 that the procedure of payment under protest was attacked in the United States as inadequate • unless it included the payment of interests. 42 Harvard Law Review 435. The question was first presented to this court in the case of Texas Co. (P. R.), Inc. v. Board of

*277Commissioners, 49 P.R.R. 911. In said case, the plaintiff, when attacking the constitutionality of one of the ordinances involved in the instant case (Ordinance No. 144 of June 6, 1933), in a certiorari proceeding brought before the District Court of San Juan, alleged as a ground for its petition that the procedure of payment under protest established by section 32a was not a legal and efficient remedy which would prevent the taxpayer from using the certiorari provided for by section 46 of said Act No. 99. of 1931. This court, speaking through Mr. Justice Travieso, made the following analysis of the Federal jurisprudence existing on the matter:

“The case of Procter & Gamble Distributing Co. v. Sherman, 2 F. (2d) 165, is cited by the appellant in support of its contention that the legal remedy granted by section 32 a is inadequate and that hence it is entitled to. the writ of certiorari. In that ease the plaintiff resorted to the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, as a court of equity, praying an injunction, which is an equitable remedy, to restrain the authorities of that State from collecting certain taxes from the plaintiff corporation. The dismissal of the bill was sought by the defendant on the ground of insufficiency. The court held that the bill was sufficient and that the plaintiff was entitled to resort to equity jurisdiction, because in its opinion the statute of the State of New York involved in the case did not give the plaintiff an adequate remedy at law for the following reasons: (1) because the phrase ‘may be refunded to such corporation’ was ambiguous and left it uncertain whether the taxpayer could compel a refund, if the authorities opposed him; and (2) because the statute in question expressly refused to allow interest on the amount refunded.
“In Southern California Telephone Co. v. Hopkins, 13 F. (2d) 814, the plaintiffs also resorted to a- court of equity praying an injunction to restrain the seizure and sale of telephone instruments in satisfaction of a local tax, which the plaintiff considered to be illegal as resulting in double taxation, which is forbidden by the laws of California. The defendants moved for dismissal of the bill upon the ground that the plaintiffs had an adequate remedy at law by paying the tax and suing to recover. The plaintiffs averred that the legal remedy afforded to them by the statute of California was not adequate because it would have bound them to bring a multiplicity of suits, and further because no interest could be recovered by the *278plaintiffs on the sum that might be refunded to them. The District Court of California dismissed the bill. On appeal, the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, following the precedent established by the case of Procter & Gamble, supra, reversed the decree of the lower court and granted the injunction prayed for, on the ground that the legal remedy which the statute of California afforded to the plaintiffs was not adequate. Upon a further appeal to the United States Supreme Court, the latter affirmed the judgment and held that the remedy afforded by the statute was inadequate since it did not provide for the payment of interest on the amounts paid under protest for the time necessary to obtain judgments, and that the equity proceeding was permissible. See Hopkins v. Southern Cal. Tel. Co., 275 U. S. 393, 399, 400.”

We transcribe below what the Supreme Court • of the United States said in the case of Hopkins v. Southern Cal. Tel. Co., 275 U.S. 393, 399, which we cited:

“Petitioners maintain that under sections 3804 and 3819, California Political Code, respondents could have protected their rights by paying the assessed tax and bringing actions to recover. But whether either of these sections applies in circumstances like those here presented is far from certain. Section 3819 gives a remedy to the owner; and Warren v. San Francisco, 150 Cal. 167, intimates quite strongly that it applies only to actual owners. Whether the lessee who has paid taxes upon the owners’ property can recover under section 3804 is also questionable. Counsel differ widely concerning the meaning of these sections and no opinion of the State court removes the doubt. In no permitted proceeding at law could interest upon payments be recovered for the time necessary to obtain judgments. The County and sixteen municipalities were interested in the taxes demanded and if petitioners had received payments, it would have been incumbent upon them to make prompt distribution. Considering all the circumstances, we find no clear, adequate remedy at law. The equity proceeding was permissible.”

We have copied the above paragraph because, as it maybe seen, even though interest is mentioned therein, this was not the only reason which justified the equitable remedy, in the judgment of the Supreme Court.

Plaintiff cites the case of Procter & Gamble Distributing Co. v. Sherman, 2 F. (2d) 165, where the following is said:

*279"But, quite independently of sucb doubts, tbe relief is inadequate because of the express refusal to allow interest. It is no answer to say that interest is not allowed against the sovereign. (Citations.) The adequacy of the requisite legal remedy cannot be measured by the remedies one has against a person who is exempt from all process. If that were the test, the principal itself might be confiscated. While I have been referred to no decision on the point, it seems to me plain that it is not an adequate remedy, after taking away a man’s money as a condition of allowing him to contest his tax, merely to hand it back, when, no matter how long after, he establishes that he ought never to have been required to pay at all. Whatever may have been our archaic notions about interest, in modern financial communities a dollar to-day is worth more than a dollar next year, and to ignore the interval as immaterial is to contradict well-settled beliefs about value. The present use of my money is itself a thing of value, and, if I get no compensation for its loss, my remedy does not altogether right my wrong.”

This doctrine has also been upheld in the case of Nutt v. Ellerbe, 56 F. (2d) 1058, 1062.

The Supreme Court of Oklahoma, in Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Eldredge, 166 P. 1085, maintained a different opinion. In said case there was alleged, among other things, the unconstitutionality of the remedy granted, because no provision was made for damages, attorney’s fees, and use of the money. Said court held that these objections were without merit.

'In the instant case, it is not necessary to definitely pass upon this question although the same appears to have been quite amply discussed by the courts which maintain that the remedy is inadequate and an injunction lies where no interest is allowed. We say that it is not necessary to definitely pass upon said question, because plaintiff has not placed itself within the principles of equity to request the writ of injunction. When it pays or offers to pay what it owes for the gasoline pumps in its possession according to the allegations of the complaint, then the question of whether or not it is in a position to request judicial intervention by an equitable proceeding can be discussed. He who seeks equity must do *280equity. This is the rule applied by the courts in a case of this kind.

Plaintiff also urges that an ordinary action would not afford to it a speedy, effective, adequate, and safe remedy at law, because the financial condition of the Government of the Capital is so embarrased that it practically amounts to insolvency, said Government not being in a position to pay its current accounts when due, for which reason, plaintiff could not recover the excise taxes which said Government illegally seeks to collect, in case the same should later be declared void. Other specific averments were made in support of this general allegation, and it is claimed that these allegations have been admitted by the defendants, who confined themselves to filing a demurrer to the complaint on the ground that the same did not state sufficient facts to constitute a cause of action and to setting up the defense that the injunction did not lie because there was an ordinary remedy authorized by law.

Without stopping to pass upon the merits of the allegation of insolvency of the Government of the Capital, we do not think that a writ of preliminary injunction should be issued to restrain the collection of a tax, because the defendants should have confined themselves to filing a demurrer to the complaint. If the demurrer had been overruled, the defendants would have been entitled to file an answer to the complaint. To assert that they have admitted the insolvency of the municipality for the fact that they filed a demurrer, is too risky, when the jurisdiction of the court is invoked to grant an equitable remedy, the object of which is to enjoin the collection of certain excise taxes.

The Legislature of Puerto Rico has clearly manifested its intention that no remedy be allowed to enjoin the collection of taxes by the Government of the Capital.

This is a wise and reasonable precaution adopted for the security of the municipal government. As the Supreme *281Court of the United States said in Tennessee v. Smeed, 96 U.S. 69, “no government could exist that permitted the collection of its revenues to he delayed by every litigious man or every embarrassed man, to whom delay was more important than the payment of costs.”

In Bismarch Water Supply Co. v. Barnes, supra, the following was said:

“It is laid down as a broad principle that in no case will the collection of a tax be enjoined where it is not shown that the injury resulting from its enforcement would be irreparable, and this fact must appear in the bill by issuable averments. High, Inj. 362; Ritter v. Patch, 12 Cal. 298. If the tax is in itself a legal one, and the property on which it is levied subject to taxation, then it cannot be said that any such injury could result from its collection. It might financially embarrass the taxpayer, it might cast a cloud on his title, it might absolutely bankrupt him, but would these be any reasons for the interference of a court of equity? Assuredly not, or the powers and process of such court would find ample employment. ... It is a matter of indifference to the public interests who pays the tax or out of what kind of property it is made. But it is of the highest importance that it be paid, and that speedily, and with as little cost and expense to the public treasury as possible. A party occupies no very equitable ground, to say the least, who admits that land which he owns is chargeable with a tax, that such tax is just and legal, but that he will make the error or neglect of an officer his excuse for delaying or defeating its payment. The last article of personal property subject to taxation belonging to the poor man may be seized and sold for the satisfaction of the tax, and courts of equity in most cases could afford no relief; while the rich man, with his broad acres, and money to fee attorneys, if permitted to take advantage of such quibbles and technicalities, might indefinitely postpone the discharge of his obligation, thereby throwing additional burdens on willing taxpayers, and embarrassing the public treasury.”

After a careful study of the allegations of the complaint, we have reached the conclusion that the judgment appealed from must he reversed and the case remanded to the lower court for further proceedings in accordance with the terms of this opinion.

*282Mr. Chief Justice Del Toro took no part in the decision of this case.